BernardSmith
Senior Member
I tend to agree with folk who argue that allowing a mead (or a wine) to age tends to improve the finished product but I usually chime in and say but that only applies to a well made wine. A poorly made mead or wine just gets older not better. But Friday night I cracked open a bottle of mead I had bottled two years ago in August and for which I pitched the yeast December 2017- avocado honey; dates, figs and cocoa nibs (10%). Last year I though the mead was a failure. I did not like the sharpness I tasted although my wife liked it. A year later and the flavors are incredibly smoother. It's a different mead. Bottom line - patience is a key ingredient and don't be quick to toss a batch down the drain. Wines, like kids, grow into maturity.